Thanks to all who participated yesterday. And, not entirely unexpected, no clear winner in the poll.
Lunch
We have PopCamp going on: a week in which people can work on prototyping crazy ideas to create new games, improve processes, or just implement this could little thing that would make our infrastructure better. Frequently food is provided, as it was today: sandwiches. But is's rainy and dreary here in downtown, so with a bunch of us we went to Kushibar for Tonkotsu Ramen. Very tasty and nourishing.
Non-G&L related
When Keith Richards brought the first '59 LP to the UK it was a second-hand instrument. Many of the other LP's that were used by the likes of Peter Green, Eric Clapton, and Jimmy Page were snatched up out of pawn shops in the days when the lads of the British Invasion were touring the US for the first time because nobody liked these guitars. For the Strat it might be a little different because Hank Marvin of The Shadows was an endorsee having been inspired by Buddy Holly. So the iconic sounds we are hearing in records of the '60' and '70's that popularized these models were recorded with instruments that were somewhere between 5 and 20 years old, not 40 or 50 or 60! Still, the '52 Tele seems unbeatable, the same for '54-'61 Strats, and the 50 year old '59 and '60 Bursts are commanding the most money. It is hard to believe that Emerald City Guitars here in Seattle has one of each. That is more than half a million in the store right there! And unlike Jamie (blargfromouterspace), I haven't had the guts yet to ask to play either one.
But it looks to me that I should be looking for a 10 year instrument in its prime if I want to a good guitar. Certainly now the manufacturing process has improved so much. Or is it the wood quality that makes the difference given that likely more old-growth was used in the early production years? And what would you consider to be the Stradivarius of our time? Or asked differently, if in 400 years composition by the great 20th century rock composers are performed, what would be the instrument the musicians of a future day would hunker for? I have given some obvious choices in the poll, but provide your own candidates if you have one.
G&L related
The previous allows me to segue to New Old Stock. I recently purchased an '85 Broadcaster from Gary Maki, aka Josey Wales (pucture courtesy of Gary):

Unplayed, wrap around the neck and plastic on pickguard still in place, original strings and hangtag, envelope with Manual etc. still stapled shut. So here's the quandary, do you start playing a guitar that couldn't be more N.O.S. and (potentially) decrease its 'investment' value? Or do you store it away and leave it is as some kind of time capsule? I decided that for me the most value was added by being able to play it. I may be a collector, but I'm not too much into museum pieces. And once again I was blown away by the sound of a Broadcaster. But what would you do?
Talk to you later!
- Jos
Edit: fix image link after album was lost.